While we now know that climate change is a major culprit in the loss in biodiversity, some researchers now believe that burgers might also be to blame. In a new report, a team from Florida International University cited the land degradation, pollution, and deforestation caused by rising global demand for meat as "likely the leading cause of modern species extinctions," and the problem is only expected to get worse.
"It's a colossally important paper," Gidon Eshel, a geophysicist at Bard College in Annandale-On-Hudson, New York, who studies how human diets affect the environment, told Science Magazine:
Researchers have struggled to determine the full impacts of meat consumption on biodiversity, Eshel says. "Now we can say, only slightly fancifully: You eat a steak, you kill a lemur in Madagascar. You eat a chicken, you kill an Amazonian parrot."
The world's "biodiveristy hotspots"—areas biologists have identified where many species flourish—have already been reduced by nearly 90 percent in size and are now restricted to only 2 percent of the earth's land surface. What's worst is that these biodiverse areas are the places where meat production is most likely to increase in the coming years. Researchers have predicted that an additional loss of as much as 50 percent of land to livestock production.
Though Americans are already eating less meat than they used to, the researchers emphasized the continued need to cut back—especially because of how much meat ends up going to waste: Thirty percent of food—or $48 billion worth—is wasted in the US each year, pushing up demand for meat production. "To support a future with lower animal product food demands," they write, "would drastically reduce habitat and biodiversity loss, fossil fuel energy use, greenhouse gas emissions, and pollution, while providing highly nutritious diets that greatly improve human health."
Read more at Your Meat-Eating Habit Is Killing More than Just Cows
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